SIR,
In answer to the enquiry of your
correspondent in your last Month’s Magazine, respecting the
situation of Mohoz. [1] I find
it thus described in an old “Geographical
Dictionary,” published the latter end of the
last century, by John Augustine Bernard, Fellow of Brazen
Nose College, and Public Professor of Moral Philosophy,
Oxon. [2]
“Mohacz, Mohatz, a town in the lower Hungary,
upon the Danube, between the river Sarwiza to the north, and
the Drave to the south; four German miles from either, six
from Esseck to the north, and nine from Colocza to the
south. This otherwise small place is memorable for two great
battles here fought; the first between Lewis king of
Hungary, [3] and Solyman the magnificent, [4] in 1526: in which that unfortunate
Prince Lewis (being about twenty years old) with twenty-five
thousand men, fought three hundred thousand Turks; when
being overpowered by numbers, twenty-two thousand of the
christian army were slain upon the place; five thousand
waggons, eighty great cannon, six hundred small ones, with
all their tents and baggage, were taken by the victors; and
the king, in his flight over the brook Curass, fell into a quagmire, and was swallowed
up: after which Solyman took and slew two hundred thousand
Hungarians, and got such a footing in this kingdom, that he
could never be expelled. This fatal battle was fought
October 29. The second in some part retrieves the loss and
infamy of the former. The Duke of Loraine [5] being sent
by the emperor [6] with express orders to pass the Drave
and take Esseck, his highness, July 10, 1687, with great
difficulty, passed that river, then extremely swelled with
rains; but finding the Prime Visier [7] encamped at
Esseck with an army of an hundred thousand men, so strongly,
that it was not possible to attack him in that post without
the ruin of the christian army, he retreated, and repassed
it the 23d of the same month; whereupon the 29th, the Prime
Visier passed that river at Esseck, and upon August 12th,
there followed a bloody fight, in which the Turks lost one
hundred pieces of cannon, twelve mortars, all their
ammunition, provisions, tents, baggage, and treasure, and
about eight thousand men upon the place of battle; besides
what were drowned in passing the river, which could never be
known: after which victory, General Dunewalt, [8] September 30th, found Esseck
totally deserted by the Turks, and took possession of
it.”
I have been thus minute in copying the above
particulars attached to the description of this place, as
they record two curious historical facts (one of which is
alluded to by your correspondent) which may prove
interesting to some of your readers.
Saltzbach, where the celebrated Marshal
Turenne [9] was killed, I apprehend to be
the place described in our geographical books and maps —
spelt “Sultzbach — a small town in
Nortgow (a province of Germany) in the upper palatinate of
the Rhine, one mile distant from Amberg to the south-east,
which gives the title of a prince to some branches of the
palatine family.” The “Encyclopedia
Britannica” gives the name of the place
“Saspach.” [10]
In our literary desiderata, a true
orthography seems particularly wanted in maps and
geographical books, where the names are often so egregiously
mis-spelt, as to make it difficult to recognize them as the
places meant; and this error, especially in maps, I suspect
to be principally owing to surveyors adopting the provincial
pronunciation, which, in many instances, is quite foreign to
the spelling.
There is too, a shameful neglect in the
compilers of our modern gazetteers, which is that of copying
the descriptions of places from former publications, without
giving themselves the trouble to enquire what alterations
may have taken place in the course of time, what
improvements may have been made in public buildings, trade,
or manufactures, &c. or their decline; by which means
error becomes perpetuated from one generation to another.
Some curious specimens of which might be selected, that
would prove these otherwise useful publications to be, in
general, mere catchpennies and the sources of much
misinformation. I am, your’s,
S. [11]
Norwich, August 9, 1798.
Notes
* MS: MS has not
survived
Previously published: Monthly
Magazine, 6 (September 1798), 183–184 [from
where the text is taken] under the pseudonym ‘S.’. New
attribution to Southey. BACK
[1]
Monthly
Magazine, 6 (August 1798), 93. BACK
[2] Edmund
Bohun (1645–1699; DNB) and John Augustine
Bernard (1660/1–after 1713; DNB),
A Geographical Dictionary (London,
1693), p. 269. BACK
[3] Louis II
(1506–1526; King of Hungary and Bohemia
1516–1526). BACK
[4] Suleiman the
Magnificent (1494–1566; Sultan of Ottoman Empire
1520–1566). BACK
[5] Charles V (1643–1690;
nominal Duke of Lorraine, 1675–1690). BACK
[6] Leopold I (1640–1705; Holy Roman Emperor,
1658–1705). BACK
[7] Suleyman Pasha, (d. 1687, Grand Vizier of
the Ottoman Empire, 1685–1687). BACK
[8] Possibly an officer in the
forces of Leopold I. BACK
[9] Henri de
la Tour d’Auvergne, Vicomte de Turenne (1611–1675),
Marshal of France. BACK
[10] Marshal Turenne was killed in battle with Imperial
forces in 1675 at Sasbach in Baden, so the
Encyclopedia Britannica was almost
correct. But the place described as Sultzbach, near
Amberg, was in Bavaria and unconnected to the site of
Turenne’s death. BACK
[11]
Monthly Magazine adds
note: ‘We thank M.I. for a similar answer to the
same enquiry.’ BACK